The defense attorney for a Lower Saucon Township man claimed prosecutors arrested the wrong man for a pair of packages containing marijuana that were shipped via UPS and FedEx and addressed to his wife's business in Allentown.

A Lehigh County jury disagreed.

The trial for Hakan Ceylan began Tuesday and jurors deliberated late into Wednesday evening before convicting Ceylan on all charges: two counts each of attempted possession with intent to deliver marijuana and possession of marijuana and a single count of possession of drug paraphernalia.

Pennsylvania State Police said they received information about packages being shipped with drugs and intercepted one of them at the UPS shipping facility in Bethlehem Township, Pennsylvania, according to court records. A second package was sent via FedEx, delivered but rejected, prosecutors said.

Lehigh County Deputy District Attorney Craig Scheetz said the packages were shipped to Ceylan's wife's counseling business at 532 W. Walnut St., one on Feb. 19 and the other on Feb. 20. Both packages were addressed to Hakan Ceylan, Impex Global, at 532 W. Walnut St., Allentown, records indicate.

There is no Impex Global business in Allentown, police previously said.

When troopers opened the first box, they found more than 31 pounds of marijuana in a plastic case with four padlocks on it, Scheetz previously said. The second package had more than 24 pounds of pot, Scheetz said.

An undercover trooper delivered the first package to 532 W. Walnut St., where an employee called Ceylan to pick it up. When Ceylan picked up the parcel, the undercover trooper identified himself to Ceylan, records say.

"Ceylan expressed interest in cooperating with the Pennsylvania State Police and requested that we go to a different location to speak about the investigation," records indicate the trooper said.

Defense attorney Eric Dowdle argued troopers did not perform surveillance on Ceylan before delivering the package and there was no evidence he sold marijuana or had keys for the padlocked containers in the delivered packages.